The Thought Occurs

Monday, 22 December 2025

THE FESTIVE SEASON AT THE UNIVERSITY OF INCLUSIVE TIME (A Seasonal Programme of Care, Accountability, and Managed Joy)

1. THE HOLIDAY EMAIL

Subject line:

Re: Re: Re: End-of-Year Pause (Formerly “Christmas”)

The Vice-Chancellor writes:

As we approach the season previously known as Christmas,
we wish to acknowledge the diversity of temporal, spiritual, and seasonal experiences present within our community.

Accordingly, the University will observe a Festive Pause, recognising:

  • winter (where applicable)

  • summer (where applicable)

  • non-linear experiences of time

  • and those for whom December is simply “late capitalism, but colder”.

Staff are reminded that:

  • Saying “Merry Christmas” is not prohibited, but strongly contextualised.

  • Saying “Happy Holidays” is preferred.

  • Saying nothing is safest.


2. THE INCLUSIVE TREE INCIDENT

A Christmas tree appears in the foyer.

Within 30 minutes:

  • A working group is formed.

  • The tree is reclassified as a Coniferous Seasonal Installation.

  • Baubles are replaced with neutral, non-representational spheres.

A placard explains:

This installation is not a tree.
It is a gesture toward verticality.

Someone asks why it is still star-shaped at the top.

The star is removed and replaced with a polyhedron.


3. THE GIFT EXCHANGE

The department agrees to a “Non-Mandatory, Non-Reciprocal, Non-Material Gift Moment.”

Gifts include:

  • A donation made on your behalf to an organisation you’ve never heard of

  • A book no one has read but everyone has cited

  • A card that says:

    “In lieu of joy, please accept this acknowledgement.”

One person accidentally brings chocolates.

They apologise.


4. THE END-OF-YEAR PARTY

Renamed:

The Gathering of Persisting Colleagues

Music is played at a volume that allows:

  • conversation

  • reflection

  • and immediate withdrawal if overstimulated

Alcohol is available, but:

  • wine is labelled “fermented grape narrative”

  • beer is “grain-based conviviality”

Someone suggests a toast.

A debate ensues about whether toasting implies hierarchy.

Eventually, everyone raises their glasses sideways, in solidarity.


5. THE SECRET SANTA SCANDAL

Secret Santa is cancelled after it is noted that:

  • secrecy is epistemically violent

  • surprise reproduces power asymmetries

  • and Santa himself has unresolved issues around labour, surveillance, and borders

It is replaced with:

Transparent Seasonal Redistribution Circle

Everyone gives the same gift to everyone else:
a reusable tote bag printed with the words
“This Means Something”


6. BETWEEN CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR

This period is officially designated:

The Liminal Administrative Void

No emails may be sent.
Except urgent ones.
Which are all urgent.

Auto-replies read:

I am currently resting, reflecting, or resisting.
I will respond when time feels appropriate.

Nothing is resolved.
Several committees are formed.


7. NEW YEAR’S EVE

Countdowns are discouraged for being:

  • teleological

  • linear

  • and exclusionary to those not ready for change

Instead, the year is gently released.

At midnight:

  • no one cheers

  • no one claps

  • a single facilitator whispers:

    “Let us acknowledge the year, without demanding transformation.”

Fireworks are replaced by a moment of ethically complex silence.


8. THE NEW YEAR MESSAGE

January 1st, 9:04 am.

An email arrives:

As we enter the new calendar year (for those who recognise it),
we encourage you to set intentions rather than goals,
aspirations rather than plans,
and feelings rather than expectations.

Please remember:
growth is optional,
productivity is contextual,
and rest is a form of resistance (unless it interferes with KPIs).


And so the year ended—not with a bang, but with a carefully facilitated acknowledgement,
fully minuted, inclusively framed,
and postponed until the new year for further consultation.

No comments:

Post a Comment